Â Her Husband’s Affairs (1947), starring Lucille Ball, Franchot Tone

Her Husband’s Affairs is a comedy starring Lucille Ball as Margaret Weldon, a wife who is constantly trying to help her husband, ad man William Weldon (played by Franchot Tone) — who doesn’t want the help. Â This is leading to significant friction between the couple (nearly leading to divorce), which gets worse when William tries to promote a fluid made by Professor Emil Glinka — a fluid Â that, once perfected, will enable the “perfect” embalming of a corpse — but in its’ present, unstable, form it can promote hair growth.

William wants to use this to promote the growth of facial hair, but Margaret has the “crazy” idea of using it for aÂ hairÂ growth formula for balding men. Â She uses it on several prominent people (including Edward Everett Horton, in a very funny supporting role), but it backfires when used on the Governor, whose head develops a glassy coating — “You can see your reflection!” Â The Governor soon issues an order for William’s arrest.

William meets with the Professor, who thinks that he’s discovered another use for his formula — immortality, which he demonstrates with a “forever flower” — a rose that’s been treated. Â The Professor has acquired a corpse to test his formula on, but before that can happen, police appear to arrest William, resulting in the accidental destruction of the Professor’s laboratory, and William being arrested for the Professor’s murder.

The Professor is actually alive, with the corpse being mistaken for him, and William decides to turn his murder trial into a publicity stunt to market the “forever flower.” Â Unwilling to let her husband go to jail, Margaret testifies “on his behalf” at his trial, testifying to his insanity. Â Margaret puts 2 and 2 together eventually, and finds the missing Professor in the nick of time at the end of the trial.

Despite what you might think from the synopsis,Â Her Husband’s AffairsÂ is actually an enjoyable romantic comedy. Â I rate it 2 stars out of 5.

Editorial review ofÂ Her Husband’s Affairs, courtesy of Amazon.com

In this classic slapstick romance, Lucille Ball plays a “helpful” wife whoÂ constantlyÂ meddles in her husband’s business. Some of her follies include weird potions, including a hair restorer that grows way too much hair. Ball and Tone work well as a comic team and the madcap script make this film a laugh riot.